Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Getting arrested, and telling the story......

AS USUAL, THESE ARE MARK'S VIEWS ALONE. NOT HIS EMPLOYERS' VIEWS.

A very distinguished journalist and former colleague of mine, John Simpson, the BBC's Foreign Editor, managed to get arrested over the weekend in Tehran trying to cover the protests. This wouldn't have scared John. In fact, he always relished an event which promoted his profile. But he's a dedicated public service broadcaster with few rivals, and he's been arrested so many times in so many countries he's probably lost count.

And immediately following his release, he made sure his team's filming was more "covert", and the BBC News coverage of the aftermath of the Iranian election, and the vote-counting process which more befitted the books of a corrupt and clinging Wall Street derivatives trader than a national electoral system, was the best available in America.

For the record, both WETA and WHUT in Washington carried his accounts. I turned to CNN tonight and, as usual, Wolf had a lot of scary scenes graphically recreated in the studio behind him, but all the footage (B-Roll) they showed was from the 1979 uprising. CNN has many courageous reporters, too (Christiane Amanpour is one) and so do the networks.

But let's hope the TV and Radio network accountants don't pull the plug on this story, possibly the most significant political change on foreign shores since the overthrow of Communism.

Do the TV Networks, and NPR, still have the resources, news judgment, or commitment to events abroad?

As usual, a generation yearns to be educated. And I don't mean the Iranians......